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3.8: Circuits with Capacitors and Inductors

  • Page ID
    1749
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    Learning Objectives
    • Introducing when a circuit has capacitors and inductors other than resistors and sources, the impedance concept will be applied.
    circuit5.png
    Figure 3.8.1 A simple RC circuit

    Let's consider a circuit having something other than resistors and sources. Because of KVL, we know that:

    \[v_{in}=v_{R}+v_{out} \nonumber \]

    The current through the capacitor is given by:

    \[i=C\frac{\mathrm{d} v_{out}}{\mathrm{d} t} \nonumber \]

    This current equals that passing through the resistor. Substituting:

    \[v_{R}=Ri \nonumber \]

    into the KVL equation and using the v-i relation for the capacitor, we arrive at

    \[RC\frac{\mathrm{d} v_{out}}{\mathrm{d} t}+v_{out}=v_{in} \nonumber \]

    The input-output relation for circuits involving energy storage elements takes the form of an ordinary differential equation, which we must solve to determine what the output voltage is for a given input. In contrast to resistive circuits, where we obtain an explicit input-output relation, we now have an implicit relation that requires more work to obtain answers.

    At this point, we could learn how to solve differential equations. Note first that even finding the differential equation relating an output variable to a source is often very tedious. The parallel and series combination rules that apply to resistors don't directly apply when capacitors and inductors occur. We would have to slog our way through the circuit equations, simplifying them until we finally found the equation that related the source(s) to the output. At the turn of the twentieth century, a method was discovered that not only made finding the differential equation easy, but also simplified the solution process in the most common situation. Although not original with him, Charles Steinmetz presented the key paper describing the impedance approach in 1893. It allows circuits containing capacitors and inductors to be solved with the same methods we have learned to solved resistor circuits. To use impedances, we must master complex numbers. Though the arithmetic of complex numbers is mathematically more complicated than with real numbers, the increased insight into circuit behavior and the ease with which circuits are solved with impedances is well worth the diversion. But more importantly, the impedance concept is central to engineering and physics, having a reach far beyond just circuits.


    This page titled 3.8: Circuits with Capacitors and Inductors is shared under a CC BY 1.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Don H. Johnson via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.